1 / 20

The Chinese Revolution

The Chinese Revolution. Essential Question. How did the Communist Party of China take power?. Introduction. 1912 – Qing Dynasty ends, & long struggle to establish new government begins Universities provided theoretical foundation for political reconstruction

kohana
Download Presentation

The Chinese Revolution

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Chinese Revolution

  2. Essential Question • How did the Communist Party of China take power?

  3. Introduction • 1912 – Qing Dynasty ends, & long struggle to establish new government begins • Universities provided theoretical foundation for political reconstruction • Secret societies plotted to restore Chinese Emperor • Japan & Europe wanted to divide China into imperial zones

  4. Revolution in China • Revolutionary Alliance opposed Qing Dynasty in 1911 • Claimed right to establish government, but lacked the power to do so • Revolutionary Alliance elected president, but warlords continued to dominate • Yuan Shikai, most powerful warlord, tried to take power, plans interrupted by Japanese intervention

  5. Revolution in China • 1915 – Japan presented Shikai with 21 Demands, he tried to ignore them • Another warlord opposed Japan more strongly, Shikai was overthrown • In the chaos Japan seized control of northern China

  6. May 4th Movement • May 4, 1919 – Massive demonstrations protested invasion by Japanese • Movement was meant to create liberal democracy • Called for abandonment of Confucianism in favor of Western ideals • Led to emergence of Communism in China

  7. Russian Influence • Russian Revolution served as model for possible reform in China • Marxist groups started in universities & coastal cities • Founded Socialist Youth Corps in 1920 • 1921 – Marxist leaders met in Shanghai & formed Communist Party of China

  8. Seizure of Power by the Guomindang • 1919 – Sun Yat-sen tried to revitalize reform movement by creating Nationalist Party of China (Guomindang) • Militarized in order to drive out warlords • Power came from commercial groups, warlords, & criminal organizations • Yat-Sen formed alliance with Communist Party in 1924

  9. Seizure of Power by the Guomindang • Nationalist Party received support from Soviet Union • Chiang Kai-Shek became associate of Yat-Sen • Chaotic economic situation got worse • Failure to address problems of peasants hurt Nationalists

  10. Mao & the Peasant Option • Mao Zedong was a peasant, but joined nationalist movement • Influenced by Marxists, saw peasants as key to successful revolution • Rose to power in Communist Party after a split between Nationalists & Communists • 1925 – Yat-sen died, Kai-Shek began to expand Nationalist territory

  11. Mao & the Peasant Option • 1927 – Seized Shanghai, later captured Beijing & was seen as most powerful leader in China • Kai-Shek was most influential warlord, ruthlessly eliminated rivals • Kai-Shek’s army eliminated all Communists in Shanghai • Purges spread to other cities, & caused civil war between Nationalists & Communists

  12. Communist Victory • Nationalists supported by businesses, intellectuals, landlords, & military • Kai-Shek asked West for support against Communists, but only Soviet Union helped • Mao started Communists movement, but was forced to Northwest China by Nationalists • 1937 – Japan invaded China

  13. Communist Victory • Nationalists continued to attack Communists until they had to unite to confront Japanese • Japanese defeated Kai-Shek’s army, Communists successfully attacked Japanese & regained much of northern China • Nationalists confined to northern cities, & Communists had upper hand after WW2

  14. Communist Victory • Mao drove Nationalists to Taiwan in 1949 • Proclaimed “People’s Republic of China” • Key to Success – Program of rural reform • Mao concentrated on social & economic reform for peasants, which gained him many supporters

  15. Mao’s China • Communists took control of a unified country • Government had strong political & military organization • People’s Liberation Army accepted the Communist Party’s Leadership • China’s power grew, & they eventually split with the Soviet Union

  16. Economic Growth & Social Justice • 1950-1952 – Land redistributed to peasants • Communists’ goal was industrialization, just like in Russia • Mao introduced the Mass Line approach, which brought peasants together in production groups • Mao introduced the Great Leap Forward in 1958

  17. Economic Growth & Social Justice • Industrialization was based in rural communities rather than urban factories • Immediate consequences were disastrous • Famine & falling production • Population grew fast, which increased economic problems • Government limited families to 1 child • Mao removed from office in 1960

  18. Women’s Role in China • Mao’s programs increased the status of women • Nationalists failed to support women’s rights, so many women turned to Communism • Communist Party used women as teachers, laborers, soldiers, & some had influence in the government • Communist victory brought full legal rights to women

  19. Mao’s Last Campaign • Launched Cultural Revolution in 1965 • Student demonstrators began mass criticism of Mao’s political enemies, called pragmatists • Support grew in army, but pragmatists regained control of government • “The Gang of Four” attempted to continue the revolution until Mao’s death in 1976

  20. Mao’s Last Campaign • Military & pragmatists arrested Gang of Four, & forced them out of the Communist Party • Pragmatists opened China to Western influence • Chinese have been the most successful revolutionary regime at redistributing wealth • Standard of living increased, & industrial & agricultural sectors have been more productive

More Related